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Cara Scheffler's avatar

You can also check Randy Haas for archaeological studies that suggest 50-50 gender division of big game hunting. He has additional studies out for cultures that use atlatl and sling based tech with similar findings. In regards to the UK-Great Britain argument for sampling, you could also check Megan Biesele's work; she clearly demarcates different Ju/'hoan groups based on location and language. Thanks for your investment in this topic.

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pgwerner's avatar

I'll say that the publicity around that particular Scientific American article put my sceptical instincts in high gear. First, there's my scepticism of SI itself, which has become highly ideological over the last few years, and very partisan to the so-called social justice left, to the point where that affects their scientific judgement. ( I also found it very telling that the SI authors were critical of a simplistic "Man the Hunter" model that in its unnuanced form hasn't really been accepted in anthropology in many decades, so that seemed to be a certain amount of setting up a straw man there.) Second, I'm always wary when any popular newspaper or magazine makes claims that an entire scientific theory has been definitively overthrown - very often, it's the case that there's an active debate and the popular article is simple written by someone who's a partisan of one side of that debate, and you either get an unbalanced take, or even worse, the fact that there are competing theories or an active debate at all is simply ignored.

In the case of this article, I simply did a Google Scholar search for review papers on the topic of "sexual division of labor", and somehow unsurprisingly, the majority of them hewed to the idea that there was strong evidence of a sexual division of labor being a cultural universal and there were various theories as to why. There are also some critics who more radically reject the idea of sexual division of labor as anything innate in human cultures, but that seemed to be a minority position. (Not to say minority positions are necessarily wrong.) So this seemed to be, once again, Scientific American leading with their priors and overstating their case.

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